How I Learned to Stop Hating My Mother

By Gretchen Voss
"What about me?" I spat at my mother as she sat frail and broken in a
wheelchair, her legs too wasted to carry her emaciated body.

It was Christmas of 1999, and my father, two brothers, and I were at a
family-counseling session during my mother's second — though not her last —
stint in rehab in Florida. My father had found her a few weeks earlier, lying
half-dead on the couch, her once-pristine condo looking like a homeless
person's final filthy squat, splattered with puke and diarrhea. I guess our
tough-love tactic — booting her out of the house in New Jersey to go "deal
with herself" near her sister in Florida, plus my father's recent visit on
their anniversary to announce that he didn't love her anymore and wanted a
separation — was too much for a woman who had always defined tough. When my
father scooped her off the couch and rushed her to the hospital that day, the
doctor glared at him and asked my mother, "Who did this to you?"

What a stupid question, I would have said to the doctor, had I been there.
She did this to herself.

So there we sat, on uncomfortable seats under the blinding sun on that
suffocatingly humid day, as the counselor prattled on about what my mother
needed from us to get her healthy. My mother explained that she was feeling
physically better and mentally optimistic — hell, she was even making jokes.
And I just unloaded. I told her that I had always hated her, that she was a
lousy drunk, that she deserved everything she was getting. I wanted her to feel
my pain. I wanted her to cry. I had never seen her cry, and she didn't that
day, either.

Was I being selfish? Maybe. But that's how we are with our mothers, judging
them by how well, or how poorly, they looked out for us and how they prepared
us for life. It's a role that we see strictly from our point of view, stripped
of all backstory, all emotional narrative — except for how it pertains to
us.